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Transcript
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Chapter 5
Germanic Kingdoms
in the West
W
riters in the 17th century called the five centuries between
the years 400 and 900 the “Dark Ages” because they knew
so little about them. These years were “dark” or hidden to
their understanding. These writers of the 1600s knew only
that “barbarians” had overrun the Roman Empire and that much of the
ancient learning of Greece and Rome had been lost.
Much of classical civilization was indeed lost between 400 and 800.
Travel was dangerous, commerce came almost to a standstill, and agricultural methods did not improve. Central political control and social order
disappeared amid wars and their destructive effects. The standard of living in Gaul, Italy, and Germany fell disastrously from what it was in the
days of the Roman Empire.
But the Dark Ages present more than just a tale of destruction. During
those centuries, the Greco-Roman world and the “barbarians” were
brought into the heart of the Christian Faith and its Church. The virtues
of the northern people—heroism, perseverance, and personal loyalty—
were being transformed by the Christian-Roman traditions of faith, intellectual investigation, compassion, moral responsibility, and legal wisdom.
Greco-Roman civilization was not lost in the Dark Ages; it was remade
into Christendom.
Christendom is the name given to the civilization that arose from the
ancient civilizations of Greece, Rome, and Israel. Beginning in the Dark
Ages, Christendom developed in western and eastern Europe and later
spread to North and South America.
115
116
LIGHT TO THE NATIONS: Christendom, from the Birth of Our Lord to the End of The Middle Ages
The North Invades
the South
The greatest migration of peoples in human history took
place in the fourth through sixth centuries. During that
time, Germanic tribes and nations descended on the
provinces of the Roman Empire and claimed the lands
of Gaul and Iberia.
The Germanic peoples were formerly spread across
the forests south of the Baltic Sea and the plains and
river valleys of Eastern Europe. During the later years of
the Roman Empire, they moved with their families and
herds into the Danube and Rhine valleys, and from there
into Western Europe—Gaul, Italy, and the Iberian
Peninsula. Beginning in the fourth century, a new wave
of Germanic tribes moved down from the southern
coasts and forests of the Baltic Sea region, through Dacia
and Hungary, and into Roman lands.
For a hundred years, the imperial armies made use of
some Germanic tribes as allies against other Germanic
peoples. Then, in the later years of the empire, the
Romans allowed several Germanic tribes to move their
families as settlers and colonists into empty or underpopulated lands in Gaul or along the Danube River.
Because of mistakes made by Roman commanders, the
tribes finally moved into the empire of the West as conquerors, ruling over a much larger Romanized population. They set up kingdoms of their own, independent of
the Roman emperors in Constantinople.
The Germanic tribes that had given warriors to the
armies of Rome for a century or more regarded themselves as part of the Roman world. They did not think of
themselves as Germans, but Romans. To these immigrants, to be Roman was to be Christian, to belong to the
religion of the empire. Many of the Germanic tribes had
been converted generations before
by Arian missionaries and were
Germanic warriors
proud of their faith.
pillage Rome
Chapter 5
Germanic Kingdoms in the West
117
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Gemanic movements
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The Germanic World
one people, the Germanic
Though they did not consider themselves 15˚E
30˚E
nations had similar cultures that distinguished them from the peoples of
the Mediterranean civilization. So it is that we can speak of Germanic languages, social organization, or law.
Language and Social Classes
Though Germans of one tribe did not understand the language spoken by
Germans of another tribe, their languages were related. Germanic language
is a branch of the great Indo-European language family, which includes
45˚E
118
LIGHT TO THE NATIONS: Christendom, from the Birth of Our Lord to the End of The Middle Ages
demigod: a being who
has more power than a
human being but less
than a god
Persian, Greek, and Latin. There are three distinct Germanic language
branches: Eastern, or Gothic (now wholly lost); Western (from which come
modern German, Dutch, and English); and Northern (from which come
Swedish, Norwegian, and Danish).
The Germans’ long history of migration and their constant fights with
the other peoples of the eastern plains had made them into a warriorhunter society. War was necessary to defend the tribe, and the people
devoted all their resources to it. All free men were expected to learn the use
of arms—spear, sword, axe, and shield. Women, too, sometimes took up
spear and shield and joined their men on the battle line. Those in the tribe
who fought and hunted best were the elite, and from them came the kings
and their circle of comrades in arms.
The Germanic “kings” traced their family lines back to mythological
gods or demigods of an ancient heroic age. Germanic leaders were
expected to rely on the counsel of the tribal elders, men who had earned
their peers’ respect or represented some powerful family. These elders also
chose the next leader or deposed the present leader if they found him cowardly or unfit. The old songs tell tales of bad kings, like Hermanreich, who
ruled the Goths so badly that they finally drove him out in disgust.
Germanic leaders were protected by a band of comrades—their cousins
and friends, or the best warriors of the tribe who were supported by the
king and fought beside him in battle. These companions were expected to
protect their lord with their lives, and they swore oaths of loyalty that they
dared not break. These warriors could expect a similar loyalty from their
lord, who became famous through their deeds as well as by his generosity
to them in dividing the spoils of battle and giving his own wealth to them
and their families. One of the king’s titles was “Ring-giver,” for the gold
rings he gave as gifts to his warriors.
Germanic Law
The Germans were not ruled by written codes or by the edicts of kings or
magistrates; for the Germans, the word “law” meant “age-old custom.”
Even the lowest free man could appeal to the customary law of the tribe
for justice. But each tribe had a different law, and at first those laws were
not written down. Instead, they were memorized and passed along by the
bards or the council elders.
When people were accused of a crime under Germanic law, they were
considered guilty until they proved their innocence. To prove their innocence, those who were accused could appeal to eyewitness testimony and
to three kinds of “evidence”: the oath, the ordeal, and the combat.
Chapter 5
Germanic Kingdoms in the West
119
In taking an oath, the accused called on a god to
support him for telling the truth or punish him for
lying. Christian Germans swore by God’s power or on
the altar of a church. In an ordeal, the oath taker
underwent severe pain or torture to prove he was
telling the truth. The clean healing of the wound
resulting from the injury was also a sign of a true oath.
Trial by combat involved a fight, perhaps to the
death, with a court-appointed opponent or with one’s
accuser. It was believed that the god invoked in the
oath would award the victory to the man who had
sworn truthfully. Christian Germans said God would
save the innocent. Some Christians, however, said
God did not decide justice through violent combats
or ordeals.
The Gods of the North
Before accepting Christianity, the Germanic peoples
worshiped fierce and frightening gods. In Germanic
myth, the gods were forever at war with the giants and
demons of the ice and cold. These divine beings were
not thought to be very concerned with human life;
indeed, they demanded human sacrifice. The human sacrifice of captives
and slaves to the gods continued in the far northern part of Europe until
the Christian Faith brought an end to the terrible practice.
What knowledge we have of Germanic gods we get through the stories
of the Norse gods, who must have been similar to the gods of the other
Germanic peoples. The major gods of the Norsemen were all war gods—
the brothers Wodin, Thor, and Tiw ruled the Germanic pantheon. They
required men’s lives in battle. Recklessness on the battlefield was considered
An eighth-century
Viking stele, with
depictions of the Norse
god Odin (Wodin) riding Sleipnir, his eightlegged horse, and
Valkyries guarding the
gates of Valhalla
The Days of the Week
T
he names for the days of the week in English come from the names of
ancient German gods: the Sun, the Moon, Tiw, Wodin, Thor, and Freia.
The Roman god, Saturn, gave his name to the last day, Saturday. Can
you spot the gods’ names in our modern version of the days’ names?
pantheon: the gods of a
people or nation; also, a
temple dedicated to all
the gods
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LIGHT TO THE NATIONS: Christendom, from the Birth of Our Lord to the End of The Middle Ages
a religious act, sacred to Thor.
Men who were brave and fought
well would be taken to Valhalla
(the “gods’ hall”) after death to
feast with the gods.
According to German myths,
the world would end one day in
a colossal battle of the gods
with the giants. Mankind would
perish in the conflict. The world
would end in a final defeat.
Because of this belief in universal destruction, the Germans
believed that, in this life, only
courage in the face of certain
defeat proved human worth.
Germanic songs and poems celebrated courageous defeat as
much as victories and successes.
Even when they became
Christian, the Germans saw
courage as the greatest virtue.
No one was to give up the
Christian Faith, not even under
threat of torture and death. The
Germanic soul rejoiced in the
stories of the martyrs.
Thor, Norse God of
Thunder. He is the
enemy of the giants
whom he intimidates
with his hammer. His
chariot wheels make
the thunder. Undated
woodcut.
The Visigoths in the
Iberian Peninsula
As you learned in the previous chapter, the Visigoths moved into southern
Gaul after the death of their leader, Alaric (who had sacked Rome in 410).
After pushing the Vandals over the mountains into Iberia, the Visigoths
drove them out of the Iberian Peninsula altogether. Thus the Visigoths
added the Roman province of Hispania to their realm.
In southern Gaul and Hispania, the Visigoths made a huge kingdom
centered on the city of Toulouse in Gaul. The kingdom stretched from the
Chapter 5
Germanic Kingdoms in the West
Loire River to the Mediterranean coast, and it went from the Alps, over the
Pyrenees, into the Iberian Peninsula. The family of Alaric, called the
Baltings (because they claimed descent from the legendary hero, Balto),
ruled the Visigothic kingdom for two centuries until the last Balting died
in battle with the Franks.
Southern Gaul was, at first, the most important part of the Visigothic
kingdom, since it contained both the capital and the richest lands. But in
507, in fierce battles, the Franks drove the
Visigoths from most of Gaul. The
Visigoths established their kingdom in
Hispania, making Toledo their new royal
capital.
These aggressive immigrants were only
a tiny percentage of the population in
Hispania, the Roman province that eventually became Spain. Arian Visigothic
monarchs ruled the Catholic descendants
of the Roman provincials in the peninsula
from 476 until 713. With the Visigoths
came Arian bishops and clergy; an Arian
form of the liturgy (in Gothic and Latin),
and a Gothic-language Bible that had
been translated by Wulfilas in the fourth
century. Most of the Visigoths, however,
heard their own language only in the
liturgy or the Gothic Bible, since they had
come to speak Latin. To their Catholic
subjects in Hispania and Gaul, whose
liturgy and Scriptures were entirely in
Latin, these Visigothic rulers were heretics and foreigners.
The Visigoths were an unruly lot. They fought among themselves constantly, and they assassinated many of their kings. They elected their kings;
but once elected, a king had to beware rivals in his own country as well as
enemies from outside the kingdom.
The Visigoths preserved a significant part of the Greco-Roman heritage.
For two-and-a-half centuries, Visigothic rulers, intellectuals, and artists
tried to preserve as much as possible of the classical culture of Greece and
Rome.
Catholic monasticism flourished in Visigothic Hispania, especially in
the sixth and seventh centuries. During this period, many saints were
associated with these centers of Catholic spirituality. Monasteries were
121
Portraits of the
Visigothic kings Athaulf
and Athanagild
122
LIGHT TO THE NATIONS: Christendom, from the Birth of Our Lord to the End of The Middle Ages
also centers of learning. Monks were often writers, editors, copyists, librarians, and school teachers.
The Illustrious Family of Severianus
For two generations, one family of mixed Latin and Gothic blood
greatly influenced the Visigothic kingdom. The family had no particular last name, but all its members in question were descendants
and relatives of Severianus, a Catholic Latin, and his wife, who was
a Gothic convert from Arianism to Catholicism. This couple lived
in Cartagena (Murcia) on the Mediterranean coast of Spain. Later,
they moved west to Seville.
Severianus’ children, grandchildren, and in-laws included three
bishops, a king, a martyr, a princess, an abbess, and a very successful mother. The Church venerates five members of the family as
saints: Sts. Leander and Isidore, both bishops of Seville; St.
Fulgentius, bishop of Ecija and Cartagena; St. Florentina, an
abbess; and Queen Theodosia, who married Leovigild, a Visigothic
king. The next generation of Theodosia’s children was just as
important: it included St. Hermenegild and his brother, King
Reccared, as well as Hermenegild’s wife, a Frankish princess named
Ingunthis.
Tragedy in a King’s Family Leovigild was one of the most formi-
Crown of Recceswinth.
The treasure of
Guarrazar (Toledo,
Spain) was discovered
amongst the remains of
a hidden Visigothic city
in 1855. The most
priceless items of the
treasure are two votive
crowns engraved with
the names of the kings
Suintila and
Recceswinth.
dable of the Visigothic monarchs. He subdued rebellions and conquered parts of the Iberian Peninsula not previously controlled by
the Visigoths. He also sought to unify his kingdom. To do this, he
tried to force Arianism on his Catholic subjects, who made up
approximately 90 percent of the population. The attempt backfired, bringing personal tragedy to the king’s own family.
Leovigild’s first wife, Theodosia, was Catholic; but she died before he
was elected to the throne. The newly elected monarch quickly married
Goswintha, widow of the previous ruler and an enthusiastic Arian. She
insisted that her stepsons be raised in the Arian faith. In 579, Leovigild
married his eldest son, Hermenegild, to Goswintha’s 13-year-old granddaughter, Ingunthis, a Frankish princess. The old queen tried to force
Ingunthis to convert to Arianism, but Ingunthis was as fiercely Catholic as
her grandmother the queen was passionately Arian. King Leovigild grew
so tired of the quarreling in his palace that he sent Prince Hermenegild
and his young wife south, to Seville, and gave him the grand title, Duke of
Baëtica.
Chapter 5
Germanic Kingdoms in the West
Leander, a member of the family of Severianus and Hermenegild’s uncle,
was bishop of Seville at the time. When Ingunthis arrived in Seville, she
joined with Bishop Leander in converting Hermenegild. The Arian king
and queen were furious. Because Leander had brought Hermenegild into
the Catholic Church, Leovigild for a time banished the bishop from Seville.
Hearing of his son’s conversion, Leovigild summoned him to return to
Toledo. Hermenegild refused. Instead, seeing the harsh way Leovigild
treated Catholics, Hermenegild led a rebellion against his father.
Southwestern Spain declared its independence from Toledo, and
Hermenegild was crowned king in Seville.
But Leovigild—a great warrior and strong leader—recaptured the rebel
cities one by one. When Hermenegild was seized in Cordova, Leovigild
banished him to distant Valencia. On Easter day, 585, Hermenegild was
martyred because he refused to receive Easter communion from an Arian
bishop. His young wife, Ingunthis, only 18 years old, died shortly after.
Leovigild did not long survive them; he died a year later, leaving the kingdom to his second son, Reccared.
The Arians Become Catholic
Ten months after ascending the throne, King Reccared privately accepted
the Catholic Faith. He and his uncle, Bishop Leander, spent the next two
years paving the way for the conversion of the Visigothic people. The
arrangements included the celebration of an assembly of Catholic and
Arian religious leaders.
On May 8, 589, in the city of Toledo, the Arian bishops—along with the
Visigothic civil and military leaders and King Reccared himself—solemnly
made a public announcement of their conversion to Catholicism.
Reccared officially forbade Arianism in the realm. After more than a century of religious conflict, the small minority of ruling Arian Visigoths
accepted the faith of the people they had conquered.
This momentous event, which would color so much of Spain’s history
from then on, took place at the Third Council of Toledo. The renowned
assembly became the model for many future national assemblies. The
councils of Toledo were to become one of the most important institutions
of the Visigothic monarchy. They were a unique sign of the close cooperation that developed between Church and state.
After Reccared’s long and productive reign, the Visigoths enjoyed little
political stability. Reccared’s grandson was assassinated, and the old cycle
of quarrelsome rivalries began again. In this troubled state, the Church
remained a source of stability. The bishops held the Visigothic kingdom
123
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LIGHT TO THE NATIONS: Christendom, from the Birth of Our Lord to the End of The Middle Ages
together by their wisdom as well as by
their spiritual authority. They counseled
the kings and lords, saw to the administration of government, and handled foreign
affairs. The Church took up some of the
responsibilities the kings were unable to
fulfill.
Adding to the civilizing work of the
bishops, monasteries brought their orderly
life and free schooling to all social classes.
The Visigothic church made Spain a beacon of learning and civilization in the early
Middle Ages. St. Isidore of Seville, one of
the children of Severianus, wrote an encyclopedic work, the Etymologies, in which
he collected all the learning known in his
time. The Etymologies deals with grammar,
logic, medicine, God, the angels, man,
birds and beasts, geography, law, food,
clothing, ships, and houses, among other
topics. The Etymologies helped preserve
much of Greek and Roman wisdom and
knowledge. It was an important text for
the centuries to come.
Reliquary of Saint
Isidore [detail]
The Vandals in North Africa
Over the frozen Rhine and into the province of Gaul in the winter of 406
poured the whole Vandal nation, bringing their wagon trains of children
and household goods. The Emperor Gratian had not paid them for their
services in guarding the imperial border, and so they descended on the
southern half of Gaul. They were angry at Roman treachery and scornful
of the civilized weaklings who had betrayed them.
Checked on the north by the Franks and harried by the Visigoths leaving Italy, the Vandals crossed into the Iberian Peninsula in 409 with their
allies, the Suevi. There they looted the old Roman towns of Hispania and
the cities on the coast. The arrival of Visigoth bands in the 420s forced the
Vandals to move on to regions not yet plundered—the rich provinces of
North Africa, the undefended grain lands of the empire.
Chapter 5
Germanic Kingdoms in the West
Left without a male heir to their ancient royal family, the Vandals
elected Genseric as king. Genseric was both a cripple (from a childhood
accident) and the son of a slave, but he had overcome both these handicaps by his ferocity in battle and persuasive oratory. He achieved election
as king through clever political maneuvering and the murder of rivals.
In 429, Genseric led his people across the Straits of Gibraltar on ships
whose crews were forced to carry them or die. One by one the towns of the
grain lands fell to the fierce warriors, until Genseric’s horde was at the
gates of Carthage. A Vandal army besieged Hippo, where St. Augustine rallied his townspeople to resist. The aged bishop died during the siege,
falling ill from the general starvation and sickness that finally forced his
people to open the gates to the barbarians. Carthage itself fell to Genseric’s
trickery when a traitor within the city opened a gate.
Knowing that the road to further loot was the sea, Genseric built a fleet
of warships and had trained his men to sail them. Piracy filled his coffers
quickly. He conquered Sardinia and Corsica and left them suffering under
a Vandal garrison. He landed in Sicily and overran the huge island in a
year. Then he landed on Italian shores and marched on Rome. Despite the
bribe paid by Pope St. Leo the Great, Genseric’s warriors entered the city
in 455 and looted and burned for two weeks. He took away the last treasures of pagan Rome, including the sacred vessels, the Great Menorah and
the serving basins, brought to Rome by Titus in .. 71 from the sack of
the Temple of Jerusalem.
The Vandals, lords as well as fighting men, carved out huge
estates for themselves from the imperial grain fields of North
Africa. The Roman population, helpless before them, was
enslaved or reduced to serfdom. The Vandals were Arians,
though they were less given to Christian forgiveness and virtue
than their Germanic neighbors, the Visigoths, were. Genseric’s
Arianism gave him the excuse to loot Catholic churches and to
confiscate Church lands. Catholics were made to pay a harsh tax
for not converting to Arianism, and Catholic bishops were
thrown into prison.
Vandal cruelty to Catholics only increased after Genseric’s
death. His successors used the excuse of religion to try to bleed
more money out of their subjects. Medieval writers found many
stories to tell of martyrdom at the hands of the Vandal lords.
Menorah
125
garrison: troops stationed in a territory
or at a base camp
menorah: a sevenbranched candelabrum
used in Jewish worship;
in ancient times, the
Jerusalem temple had a
large menorah
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LIGHT TO THE NATIONS: Christendom, from the Birth of Our Lord to the End of The Middle Ages
But in becoming used to the luxuries and
easy life of wealth, the warriors grew corrupt, fat, and lazy. Their sons were not
made to learn the rigors of a warrior’s life,
and the Vandal ruling class lost its ferocity.
At his death, Genseric left his kingdom
to his son, Hunneric, who kept the kingdom alive through the profits from piracy
and the treacherous treaties his father had
made with his neighbors. But after
Hunneric, no king could stop the decline of
the Vandal nation. Divided from their subjects who hated them, the Vandals could
not stand against the armies of the Eastern
Roman emperor Justinian in 533. They disappeared as a distinct people, mixing in
with the highly diverse local population of
North Africa.
The First Catholic
Germanic
Kingdom
Clovis, King of the
Franks, in a turbulent
war scene from the
fifth century, A.D.
In 394, at the invitation of Emperor
Theodosius, a confederation of tribes
moved into Gaul to take service with the
Roman armies. These Franks (meaning
“free men”), as the tribes began to call
themselves, had lived for centuries in what
is now Belgium and along the Rhine and
Main rivers in Germany. They had been
allies of the Roman legions. The Frankish
kings all claimed descent from a mythic hero, Merovech (after whom they
called themselves Merovings).
When Roman power collapsed in Gaul, the Frankish kings moved their
people onto the farms and into towns there which belonged to Romans.
And there was no Roman opposition. Only the Catholic bishops and
Chapter 5
Germanic Kingdoms in the West
127
priests maintained what shreds of Roman
government and order that remained.
The Franks were not Christian and had
accepted little of the Roman way of life. They
still fought without armor and on foot and
went to war largely unclothed, armed with a
spear, a sword, and a battle-axe called the
francisca (or “little freedom”). They obeyed
their chiefs only when those chiefs were successful in battle.
The Merovings
In 481, Clodevech, the 16-year-old chief of
one of the Frankish tribes, secured his father’s
claim to kingship by exterminating all his
cousins and rivals. At age 21, this chief,
known to history as Clovis, led his tribe into
the Seine valley. He killed the Roman governor there, taking the towns of Soissons,
Rouen, Reims, and Paris. Then he marched
through the Loire River valley to the borders
of Brittany and secured his western border.
Safe on one front, he moved against his
cousins along the Rhine and killed them one
by one. By 491, Clovis held all the Frankish
princedoms except Cologne. He slew every prince of Meroving blood who
fell into his hands, and he did his best to exterminate all other members of
rival families who could lay claim to his throne.
Clovis’ conquests brought him into contact with the Burgundians,
another Germanic invader nation, to the south. He sent ambassadors and
married their princess, Clotilde, the Burgundian king’s niece. Clotilde, a
devout Catholic, was determined to convert her new husband to the
Christian Faith. According to legend, when Clovis was awaiting a battle
with the Germanic Alamanni, his wife said he would conquer only if he
agreed to serve the one true God, the Lord of Hosts and Judge of all battles. Clovis cried out, “O Christ Jesus, as a suppliant I crave your glorious
aid; and if you grant me victory over these enemies, I will believe in you
and be baptized in your name!” The Franks then drove the Alamanni from
the field in defeat.
The Merovings believed
they were descended
from a mythic hero
named Merovech.
128
LIGHT TO THE NATIONS: Christendom, from the Birth of Our Lord to the End of The Middle Ages
Clovis, the first Catholic
Germanic king
In fulfilling his contract with the Christian God, Clovis
had himself baptized at Reims by Bishop Remigius (St.
Remi) on Christmas Day, 496. Referring to Clovis’ ancestor,
Sigambris, a legendary Frankish villain, Remigius declared,
“Bow your neck, Sigambrian, and adore that which you
have burned and burn that which you have adored.”
Clovis was the first Germanic king who adopted the
faith of his Roman subjects; they and their clergy from
then on served him with a loyalty no Arian Visigoth,
Ostrogoth, or Vandal could ever win from his Roman subjects. The Catholic bishops, who had kept all local government from disappearing, gave Clovis a working
governmental organization along with their faith. Their
loyalty reinforced his sword. Bishop Avitus of Vienne
declared, “Your faith is our triumph. Every battle you fight
is a victory for us.”
Clovis’ conversion moved the rest of his people to follow
him. In a single generation, the old Frankish paganism disappeared, and the Franks became Catholic. However, even
after his baptism, Clovis remained as cruel, unscrupulous,
and treacherous as he had ever been. In his later years,
Clovis persuaded his cousin, the prince of Cologne, to kill
his own father and claim the throne. For this crime (to which Clovis had
pushed him), Clovis marched on the son and put him to death as a fatherslayer. Thus he disposed of his last Meroving rival.
In 511 Clovis died, dividing his kingdom among his four quarrelsome
sons. They followed their father’s treacherous example more than that of
their Catholic Faith. One of Clovis’ sons ordered his own son burned alive
for offending him. Another of Clovis’ sons was killed by his conspiring
sons, who then fought among themselves until only one was left. Clovis’
last surviving son, Clothar, divided the Frankish realm between his two
sons. For more than a century two Frankish kingdoms—Austrasia, the east
kingdom along the Rhine Valley, and Neustria, the west kingdom comprised of northern Gaul—warred and plotted against each other and with
their neighbors, the powerful Frankish dukes of Burgundy and Aquitaine.
The Rise of the Mayor of the Palace
chancellor: the secretary or chief magistrate
of a king
The Meroving kings were served by chancellors, called “mayors of the
palace,” who increasingly took on themselves the task of ruling the kingdom. The last Merovings ruled no more than the lands of their small
Chapter 5
Germanic Kingdoms in the West
farms; the mayors of the palace commanded the
armies and passed laws in the king’s name. Because
they believed the Meroving kings were sacred, the
Franks refused to abandon the royal line. At last, in
688, a new mayor took office; he would rescue the
Frankish kingdom from the corruption of the
Merovings and advance both Frankish power and the
Christian Faith at home and abroad. He was Pepin
the Younger.
Pepin restored the Frankish kingdom to the
boundaries it had in Clovis’ time, and he defended the
kingdom from outside attack. He sent missionaries
into the forests and valleys of Germany to convert the
last pagan tribes on his borders. St. Willebrord and his
12 companions preached the Gospel to the Frisians,
and St. Boniface converted the heathen Hessians.
Pepin’s son, Charles, as mayor of the palace was so
successful in putting down a rebellion among the
tribes east of the Rhine that he was given the nickname of Martellus or Martel (meaning “Hammer.”)
Charles Martel established his rule over all the Frankish lands.
Pepin’s great-grandson, Pepin the Short, finally removed the
Merovingian kings from power and ruled in his own name as king. He was
crowned by St. Boniface at Reims in 751. Pepin the Short began a new line
of Frankish kings, called the Carolingians. They were named for his father,
Charles Martel (Charles is Karl in Frankish and Carolus in Latin, from
which comes the name “Carolingian”). Charles Martel’s grandson was
Charles (known to history as Charlemagne), who revived the Roman
Empire in the West.
The Kingdom of The
Ostrogoths
After the death of the Western Roman Emperor Valentinian III in 455, the
imperial court withdrew into the walls of Ravenna. Since the imperial
armies were composed entirely of German mercenaries, their commander
—called the “Master of Horse”—was the real ruler of the Western Roman
Empire, not the emperor himself.
Charles Martel in
battle
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LIGHT TO THE NATIONS: Christendom, from the Birth of Our Lord to the End of The Middle Ages
Romulus Augustulus
surrenders to Odoacer
the Insignia of Empire.
The Last Emperor
In 475, one Orestes—a Roman who had served as Attila the Hun’s Latin
secretary and had married into the Roman aristocracy—bribed the Senate
at Ravenna into naming his young son emperor. The new boy emperor was
called Romulus Augustulus—Romulus, from the legendary founder of
Rome, and Augustulus, “little Augustus,” after the founder of the Roman
Empire.
The German troops had been promised one-third of Italy for themselves if they went along with the election of the new emperor. But
Romulus Augustulus and his father Orestes made the fatal mistake of
refusing to honor the promise. So the troops elected as king their own
commander—a Goth named Odoacer. In 476 Odoacer removed the boy
emperor, giving him a villa at Naples and a fortune in gold; Orestes was
beheaded. Odoacer styled himself king of the Germans in Italy, claiming
the lands of the Western Roman Empire for himself. But only Italy and the
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In 488, the Eastern Emperor Zeno financed an invasion of Odoacer’s
Italian territories and chose Theodoric, the young king of the Ostrogoths,
to carry it out. Theodoric was the heir of the Amalings, the hereditary
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royal line of the Ostrogoths. To save Theodoric from family rivals, his
father had sent him to the imperial court in Constantinople to be raised
and trained in military skills.
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The Germanic kingdom
coasts of the Adriatic Sea were under his control. The imperial regalia
were sent to the eastern emperor, Zeno, in Constantinople.
With this revolt, the great empire founded by Augustus almost 500 years
earlier simply vanished from the West.
regalia: the emblems or
symbols of royalty
(from the Latin regalis,
meaning “regal” or
“royal”)
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LIGHT TO THE NATIONS: Christendom, from the Birth of Our Lord to the End of The Middle Ages
Theodoric spent 10 years among the Greeks and Romans. He then
spent 20 years with his own people, whom he led in successful campaigns
against the Huns, Burgundians, and Avars. He had already distinguished
himself among his people as a great warrior and orator, a man wise in
council and brave in war. Emperor Zeno thought that he could trust
Theodoric to restore Italy to imperial control.
After subduing Odoacer, however, Theodoric declared himself king of
Italy and took over the imperial court at Ravenna. A new emperor in
Constantinople sent him the crown, robes, and regalia of the last western
emperor, Romulus Augustulus.
As king, Theodoric set about rebuilding Italy. He repaired aqueducts
and city walls, cleared drainage ditches, and dredged canals. Each year, he
set aside 200 pounds of gold from his revenues to repair and maintain the
public buildings and palaces of Rome and Ravenna.
Under Theodoric, the Ostrogoths continued to govern themselves by
their tribal customs; but the king wisely used Roman law to govern his
Italian subjects and had them tried in Roman courts of law. Theodoric’s
kingdom lasted 33 years under his rule and some 25 more years after his
death.
Theodoric was determined to accustom his Goths to Roman ways—
and he encouraged his Roman subjects to learn Gothic honesty and openhandedness. But the Ostrogoths were Arians, and they had their own
Arian bishops and church organization. That meant dual churches in the
one kingdom and constant friction between the Roman Italians and the
Ostrogoths. Still, no other Germanic nation seemed so capable of forming a new civilized state on the ruins of the old Roman Empire. And no
other Germanic prince was so fitted to the task of mediating between two
cultures as was Theodoric. Though an Arian, Theodoric tolerated
Catholic Christians and Jews. He had declared that “religion is a thing
which the king cannot command, because no man can be compelled to
believe against his will.”
Theodoric’s daughter married Alaric II, king of the Visigoths. When
Alaric died at the hands of the Franks, she called on her father to defend
his grandson, Amalric. Theodoric’s armies drove the Franks out of
Provence and Aquitaine and crossed the Pyrenees to defeat a rival claimant
to the Visigoth throne. Theodoric ruled the Visigoths in his grandson’s
name for the next 11 years. The two Gothic kingdoms were one. At its
height, Theodoric’s kingdom stretched from Italy to Hispania and from
Sicily on the south to the Loire River on the north. It was the largest kingdom in the West since the days of the empire.
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Toward the end of his life,
Theodoric became afraid that the
Eastern Roman Emperor Justin
in Constantinople was plotting
to kill him. Theodoric
accused his Roman subjects,
particularly the Senate, of
planning to assassinate him.
Theodoric condemned several senators to death because
of anonymous letters that
claimed they were plotting to
assassinate him. Among the senators the king put to death was the
philosopher Boethius. During the
remaining years of his life, Theodoric grew
ever more fearful and mentally unstable.
After his death, the Ostrogoth’s kingdom passed to Theodoric’s grandson, Amalric. Since the new king was still a boy, his mother, Amalasuntha
(Theodoric’s daughter), served as regent. Amalric died in his late teens,
and the kingdom fell into the usual Germanic disunity and feuding. A 20year war with the armies of the Eastern Roman Empire ended the
Ostrogoths’ kingdom in the general ruin of Italy.
Chapter Review
Summary
• Germanic peoples came from the region of the Baltic Sea and the
plains and river valleys of Eastern Europe. During the late Roman
period, they moved south and east into Western Europe and then
began to cross the boundaries of the empire.
• The Roman emperors allowed some Germanic tribes to settle within
the empire, using them as allies against other Germanic tribes.
Eventually, Germanic tribes moved into the empire as conquerors and
permanent rulers.
• Germanic nations had similar cultures, though they did not consider
themselves one people. They spoke related languages; were divided by
similar social classes; governed themselves by customary, not written,
133
Theodoric the Great,
King of the
Ostrogoths and
Alaric II, King of the
Visigoths
regent: one who governs a kingdom for a
king or queen who is
too young to govern
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LIGHT TO THE NATIONS: Christendom, from the Birth of Our Lord to the End of The Middle Ages
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
laws; and were warrior societies. Germanic nations held that courage
was the highest virtue.
Pagan Germans worshipped fierce gods who were thought to fight wars
against giants and demons of the ice and cold. Brave warriors who died
in battle were thought to be taken to the hall of these gods, called
Valhalla. Many Germanic tribes were converted to Arianism.
After sacking Rome in 410, the Visigoths withdrew from Italy and
established a kingdom in southern Gaul and the Iberian Peninsula.
Driven from southern Gaul by the Franks in 507, the Visigoths continued to rule Hispania for over two centuries. The Visigoths, who were
Arian, ruled a much larger population of Romans, who were Catholic.
A Visigothic king in Hispania, Leovigild, married Goswintha, a zealous
Arian. Through her influence and to unify his kingdom, Leovigild tried
to force Arianism on his Catholic subjects. But it did not work. Even
his son, Hermenegild, who became Catholic through the influence of
his wife, Ingunthis, refused to obey his father. After an unsuccessful
rebellion, Hermenegild was martyred for refusing to receive communion from an Arian bishop.
Leovigild’s second son, Reccared, himself became Catholic; and with
Bishop Leander of Seville, Recarred brought the Visigoths into the
Catholic Church. He officially forbade Arianism in his realm.
The Visigoths had driven another Germanic nation, the Vandals, out of
the Iberian Peninsula. Led by their king, Genseric, the Vandals went to
North Africa, where they set up a kingdom after plundering the Roman
settlements and capturing Carthage. Genseric led his people in an invasion of Sicily and Italy, conquering Corsica and Sardinia, and in 455
looted and sacked Rome itself. The Arian Vandals persecuted the
Christians in the conquered lands.
Clovis, the Merovingian king of the Franks, conquered large sections of
Gaul, seizing also the lands held by other Frankish kings. Though a
pagan (along with the rest of his people), Clovis became the first
Germanic king to become Catholic through the influence of his
Burgundian wife, Clotilde.
After Clovis’ death, his kingdom was divided between his four sons.
Over the next two centuries, the Merovingian kings became merely figureheads, their mayors of the palace carrying on the actual work of
ruling. Finally, Pepin the Short, the Carolingian mayor of the palace,
removed the last Merovingian rulers from power and was crowned
king in 751.
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Germanic Kingdoms in the West
• Theodoric, king of the Ostrogoths, overthrew Odoacer, the German
king who had deposed the last Roman emperor in the West. Theodoric
made himself king of Italy. He governed Italy and other lands he subsequently ruled wisely and well for most of his reign. Though an Arian,
he treated Catholics with tolerance. But, at the end of his life, fearing a
plot against him by the Eastern Roman Emperor and the Catholic senators in Italy, he assassinated several senators. After Theodoric’s death,
his Ostrogothic kingdom fell into disunity.
Key Concepts
Council of Toledo: held in 589; unified the Catholic and Arian churches
of Spain
king: a Germanic title for the ruling chief of the people, either an hereditary office or elected by the principal nobles. A Germanic king ruled
through custom and tribal connections.
Germanic law: age-old custom, traditional justice
Merovingians: the line of the Frankish kings claiming descent from the
legendary hero, Merovech
Carolingian: the line of Frankish kings descended from Charles Martel
(Carolus Martellus)
Dates to Remember
400–900: the “Dark Ages”
476: end of the Roman Empire in the West. The last emperor of Rome,
Romulus Augustulus, abdicates to his Germanic master of horse, Odoacer.
488: Theodoric defeats Odoacer and is proclaimed king of Italy by the
Eastern Emperor Zeno.
496: Clovis, king of the Franks, baptized as a Catholic by St. Remigius
589: King Reccared officially bans Arianism in Hispania.
751: Pepin the Short, Mayor of the Palace, is crowned king of the Franks.
Central Characters
Alaric (370–410): king of the Visigoths, sacked Rome in 410
St. Isidore (560–636): bishop of Seville; wrote the famous Etymologies,
the medieval encyclopedia
Reccared (d. 601): son of Leovigild, converted to the Catholic Faith and
brought the whole Visigothic people into the Catholic Church
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LIGHT TO THE NATIONS: Christendom, from the Birth of Our Lord to the End of The Middle Ages
Genseric (d. 477): king of the Vandals, led them into North Africa;
sacked Rome in 455
Clovis (466–511): king of the Franks, and the first German ruler to convert to the Catholic Faith
Pepin the Short (714–768): son of Charles Martel, grandfather of
Charlemagne, Mayor of the Palace, crowned king of the Franks in 751;
founded the Carolingian line of kings
Romulus Augustulus (dates unknown): last emperor of the Western
Roman Empire; abdicated to Odoacer in 476, marking the end of the
Roman Empire in the West
Theodoric (454–526): king of the Ostrogoths, king of Italy; ruled the
largest territory of any kingdom in the West until his death
Questions for Review
1. Why were the Germanic tribes able to sweep across the Roman
Empire?
2. In what way were the Germanic kings different from the Roman
emperors?
3. What were the main differences in government between the
Germanic nations and the Roman Empire?
4. Did the Germans have a written law? How did they decide questions
of justice? What is trial by combat? Trial by oath? Trial by ordeal?
5. After whom are the days of the week named?
6. Which Germanic people actually sacked the city of Rome?
7. What do the names “Visigoth” and “Ostrogoth” signify?
8. Who married the Frankish king, Clovis? How did she manage to
convert him to the Catholic Faith?
9. What was a “mayor of the palace”? Which mayor of the palace
became the king of the Franks?
10. Who were the Merovingians? The Carolingians?
11. How did Theodoric bring peace between the Arians and Catholics in
his kingdom?
Ideas in Action
1. Write a report on the Germanic gods (a good source is Roger Lancelyn
Green’s The Saga of Asgard). How are they similar to the Roman and
Greek gods?
Chapter 5
Germanic Kingdoms in the West
2. Discuss why Germanic peoples valued courage so much. Why should
such an idea have sprung from a pagan people like the Germans?
How is the Germanic ideal of courage acceptable to the Christian
Faith? What is the value of suffering or defeat? Can one “lose” and
still “win”?
3. Make a map of the Germanic kingdoms that replaced the Western
Roman Empire.
4. On a map of Europe, find the original homelands of the Germanic
peoples. Where are the Scandinavian lands? Where are the steppes?
Where is the Danube River?
Highways and Byways
The Theory of Courage
The Germanic ideal of
courage (which the English
writer J.R.R. Tolkien called
the “Theory of Courage”) is
summed up in the great
Anglo-Saxon poem, “The
Battle of Maldon.” Here are
the last words of an old warrior challenging his men to
fight on even after their lord
has been struck down.
Outnumbered and outfought—but with unflinching courage—the band of
English warriors, old men
and boys, stand against a
Viking raiding party:
Old Byrhtwold spoke then, bent in long service,
Shaking his ash spear, shield-ready, after age:
“Mind must be clearer, heart still the harder,
J.R.R. Tolkien
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LIGHT TO THE NATIONS: Christendom, from the Birth of Our Lord to the End of The Middle Ages
Courage the keener, as our strength is strained.
Lies here our leader, leveled by axes,
Bravery beaten down. Lost and lamenting,
Forever in sorrow, he who will shrink now
From war-play and peril. Old though I am, here
I purpose to perish, lie by my lord,
The hand loved and long-honored.”